Chapter 6
My words left Caspian frozen in place, eyes quickly reddening with disbelief.
His lips trembled, as if drained of all strength, and he collapsed to his knees with a thud.
He wailed, crying with apparent heartbreak, as if he truly missed the children.
I watched coldly, motionless.
“Take them all away,” I told the police.
“My lawyer will pursue each of their responsibilities. I won’t spare a single one.”
I would never forgive them.
I personally gathered my children’s scattered ashes bit by bit, gently placing them in new urns.
I commissioned an Superman headstone.
The children loved Superman most.
On burial day, the sun was bright. I stood quietly before the headstone in a black dress.
Caspian came too.
He stood outside the crowd, head down.
My bodyguards didn’t hesitate-they tackled him, beating him until his face was bruised and swollen, then dragged him out like trash.
Get him lost.” I didn’t even glance over, coldly instructing cemetery management.
That animal Caspian Williams is permanently banned from stepping foot here. He has no right to disturb my children’s peace.”
The online storm intensified with overwhelming criticism.
stopped staying silent.
called a press conference, directly announcing: dismissal of all doctors who participated in strikes, spread rumors, or maliciously organized patient family lisruptions, with legal pursuit of breach of contract.
had personally supported them with substantial funding.
They stabbed me in the back, and as doctors, they endangered patients’ lives just to flatter Caspian.
launched another high-salary recruitment program. Excellent doctors flooded into my hospital, filling all vacancies.
All patients whose treatment was delayed by the shutdown received immediate care.
standing at the press conference before media cameras, I disclosed all funding and training agreements clause by clause.
‘I run this hospital to save lives and send doctors where they’re truly needed.”
“Everyone who accepted my funding knew from the start about the three-year obligation to support underdeveloped branches. This isn’t punishment-it’s a promise.”
“Breaking promises requires compensation.”
My tone was calm but forceful.
“Today I’ll specifically mention one person-Caspian Williams.”
“I founded this hospital for him.”
“I invested my entire fortune and all resources because he said he wanted to become the best doctor and make my hospital the nation’s best.”
Back then, he might have truly loved me a little. When he learned I’d established a hospital for him, he cried while holding me, signing what was essentially an Indenture contract, swearing to obey my orders and arrangements.
I turned toward the camera, my gaze ice cold:
“The original contract was lifelong. I made him the nation’s top doctor he must obey my orders. So I have the qualification and right to assign him to Africa.
Never to return.”
“I made this decision because he conspired with his mistress to kill my gravely ill children.”
“This is his deserved retribution.”